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North Fork blocked by politics

Frank Vitale | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 11 years, 4 months AGO
by Frank Vitale
| August 3, 2014 12:53 AM

My affiliation with the North Fork spans 35 years. As a North Fork landowner I’ve worked, hunted, fished, and cleared many miles of trails. For me, keeping the North Fork pristine is personal.

That’s why I’m so disappointed by the decision earlier this year by Republicans in Congress to block a bipartisan bill to protect the North Fork.

Montanans have read conflicting information about how we reached this impasse. I want to set the record straight.

Rep. Steve Daines told U.S. News that his strategy to win the Senate race this year is to neutralize the opposition of constituents like advocates for the North Fork. His recent actions show why he can’t be trusted.

Sens. Walsh and Tester have been pushing a bill, originally introduced in 2010, to withdraw the U.S. watershed from future development, following through on a deal between Montana and British Columbia to permanently protect the North Fork.

Montanans were hopeful when Rep. Daines introduced a companion bill last year marking the first time in 30 years that the whole delegation supported a public lands bill. Our hopes rose further when on March 4 the House of Representatives passed the bill.

Unfortunately the North Fork raninto the Tea Party gauntlet in the Senate. What is clear is that the game was rigged.

On April 3, three Republican senators from other states — Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, and Texas — blocked our senators’ attempt to pass this made-in-Montana bill in the Senate. The senator from Pennsylvania, Pat Toomey, recently donated $10,000 to Rep. Daines’ campaign.

As Congressman Daines knows, the vote in the Senate (by “unanimous consent”) was the Senate’s equivalent of how the House passed the bill. According to the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service, “Most noncontroversial measures are approved by ‘suspension of the rules’ in the House, and by unanimous consent in the Senate.”

In fact, all eight Senate public lands bills that passed the chamber earlier in this session passed by unanimous consent. Those bills set aside 85,000 acres of new wilderness and 73 miles of wild and scenic river designation in eight different states.

So why is the North Fork bill so different for Senate Republicans?

The answer reminds me of another Senate race 26 years ago when President Reagan pocket-vetoed the last Montana wilderness bill to pass Congress in order to jam then-Sen. John Melcher in his race against Conrad Burns.

For example, Sen. Coburn of Oklahoma insisted on the opportunity to offer controversial amendments to the North Fork that would have brought down the entire proposal. This is a familiar ploy. The same Republican demand last fall (supported by Rep. Daines) caused the shutdown of the federal government for 16 days, costing Montana upwards of $45 million in lost business from Glacier and Yellowstone National Parks alone.

I am confident that our senators will find a way to protect the North Fork. But how can Montanans trust Steve Daines when he won’t even stand up to his own allies in the Senate who help finance his campaign?


Vitale is a resident of Columbia Falls.

 

ARTICLES BY FRANK VITALE

May 14, 2014 6:22 a.m.

Political shenanigans continue with North Fork bills

My affiliation with the North Fork spans 35 years. As a North Fork landowner, I’ve worked, hunted, fished and cleared many miles of trails. For me, keeping the North Fork pristine is personal.

February 26, 2015 1:42 p.m.

Rocking the rotunda in defense of public lands

On Feb. 16, my wife and I attended the Public Lands Rally in Helena in the state capitol rotunda. The rally began at high noon, but people started filtering through the doors well before that. Many sported posters and banners in support of keeping our federal lands in public hands. As the rally began, people continued filing into the room, standing shoulder to shoulder. All the hallways, balconies and staircase were packed full.

January 16, 2013 6:42 a.m.

NRA holding gun owners hostage

I was waiting to hear the National Rifle Association’s response following the tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary School before commenting. To no surprise, it was the same old hard-line rhetoric. So it was with great interest to me when I read Bob Brown’s “Speaking Out” comments in the Hungry Horse News on Dec. 19, 2012, “Shooting Sparks Second Thoughts.” Bob’s concern was the direction the NRA is heading.